List of public art in Dublin
This is a list of public art on permanent public display in Dublin, Ireland. The list applies only to works of public art accessible in a public space; it does not include artwork on display inside museums. Public art may include sculptures, statues, monuments, memorials, murals and mosaics.
Public art in Dublin is a significant feature of the cityscape. The city's statues and other monuments have a long history of controversy about their subjects and designs, and a number of formerly prominent monuments have been removed or destroyed. Some of the city's monuments have nicknames, though many are not in popular use.[1][2]
North city centre
O'Connell Street
Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Artist / designer | Type | Designation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Daniel O'Connell | O'Connell Street 53.347725°N 6.259314°W |
1882 | John Henry Foley | ||||
William Smith O'Brien | O'Connell Street 53.348250°N 6.259538°W |
1870 | Thomas Farrell | Previously on D'Olier Street from 1870–1929 | |||
Sir John Gray | O'Connell Street 53.3485433°N 6.259705°W |
1879 | Thomas Farrell | ||||
James Larkin | O'Connell Street 53.349085°N 6.259963°W |
1980 | Oisín Kelly | ||||
Spire of Dublin | O'Connell Street 53.349803°N 6.260249°W |
2003 | Ian Ritchie Architects | ||||
Cú Chulainn | GPO, O'Connell Street 53.349334°N 6.261075°W |
1911 | Oliver Sheppard | Installed at the GPO in 1935 | |||
Father Theobald Mathew | O'Connell Street | 1893 | Mary Redmond | Removed in 2014 to make way for the Luas extension. Restored in 2018 to new location near The Spire.[3] | |||
Charles Stewart Parnell | O'Connell Street 53.3525785°N 6.2614683°W |
1911 | Augustus Saint-Gaudens | ||||
Cathal Brugha | O'Connell Street | ||||||
Mr. Screen | Lobby of Savoy Cinema, O'Connell Street | 1988 | Vincent Browne | Previously on Hawkins Street, outside the Screen Cinema from 1988–2016. | |||
Paweł Strzelecki | Sackville Place | 2015 |
North Quays
Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Artist / designer | Type | Designation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Famine Great Famine |
Custom House Quay | 1997 | Rowan Gillespie | [4] | |||
World Poverty Stone UN International Day for the Eradication of World Poverty |
Custom House Quay | 2008 | Stuart McGrath | [4] | |||
Father Pat Noise memorial | O'Connell Bridge | 2004 | Unknown | [5] | |||
Meeting Place | Lower Liffey Street | 1988 | Jackie McKenna | Nicknamed "The Hags with the Bags" | |||
Anna Livia The River Liffey |
Croppies Acre Memorial Park, Wolfe Tone Quay |
1988 | Éamonn O'Doherty | Previously in O'Connell Street 1988–2001. At Wolfe Tone Quay since 2011. "The Floozie in the Jacuzzi"[8] | |||
1798 Rebellion memorial | Croppies Acre Memorial Park | 1998 | |||||
Flow | North Wall, Dublin in front of Dublin Landings | 2008 | Martin Richman | Recalls the banded wrapping of the freight containers that would have been shipped into this part of the River Liffey. It was commissioned by the Dublin Docklands Development Authority in 2008 to animate the Bord Gáis above Ground Installation (AGI), which is in fact a depressurisation installation for the distribution of gas within the North Lotts area in the Docklands.[9] | |||
Triumphal arch | George's Dock near river Liffey | 1813, repositioned 1998 | Unknown | Rusticated limestone ashlar arch built in 1813 and until 1998 stood in Amiens Street until it was relocated to the newly redeveloped Custom House Quay area in 1998. A plaque attached to the arch indicates that the arch was re-dedicated to Pat O'Shea for his community work and is dated April 2002. It is said to have originally been constructed to celebrate Wellington’s victory at the Battle of Salamanca and acted for many years as the principal entrance gate to Custom House Quay. |
City North East
This area of the city is bounded to the west by O'Connell Street, Parnell Square East, North Frederick Street, and Lower Dorset Street. To the north it is bounded by the Royal Canal, and to the south by the Liffey Quays. To the east it includes the North Wall.
Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Artist / designer | Type | Designation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
James Joyce | North Earl Street | 1990 | Marjorie Fitzgibbon[10] | Nicknamed "The Prick with the Stick"[11][10] | |||
Margaret Ball and Francis Taylor | Cathedral Street | 2001 | Conall McCabe | ||||
The Three Graces | Cathal Brugha Street | 1941 | Gabriel Hayes | ||||
The Wishing Hand | Marlborough Street | 2001 | Linda Brunker[12] | ||||
Talking Heads | Abbey Street | 1990 | Carolyn Mulholland | ||||
Chariot of Life | Abbey Street | 1982 | Oisín Kelly | ||||
James Connolly | Beresford Place | 1996 | Éamonn O'Doherty[13] | ||||
Universal Links on Human Rights Jails holding prisoners of conscience |
Amiens Street | 1995 | Tony O'Malley[13] | ||||
Battle of the Custom House Memorial | Memorial Road | 1957 | Yann Goulet | ||||
Scáthán | Store Street | 2007 | Robert McColgan[14] | ||||
Luke Kelly | Sheriff Street | 2019 | Vera Klute[15][13] | ||||
NC Iris | Mayor Square, IFSC, Dublin Docklands | 2006 | Vivienne Roche[13] | Commissioned by the National College of Ireland on their move to the IFCS. Built by Steel & Co.[16][17] | |||
Strong Striking Bear of Great Deeds |
IFSC House | 1999 | Don Cronin | Part of a pair 'Bear and Bull'. Bull sculpture is in lobby on other side of building. | |||
Bull | IFSC House | 1999 | Don Cronin | Part of a pair 'Bear and Bull'. Bear sculpture outside the other side of building. | |||
Dublin and Monaghan bombings Memorial | Talbot Street | 1997 | |||||
Dublin and Monaghan bombings Memorial | Parnell Street | 2008 | |||||
Summerhill Group | Summerhill | 1991 | Cathy Carman[18] | Bronze work on Kilkenny limestone. It was commissioned by Dublin Corporation as part of the Per Cent for Art Scheme. The work invokes the history of the street, before its redevelopment when children would play on the street. | |||
Beds | Portland Row | 1993 | Fred Conlon | [19] | |||
Home | Buckingham Street | 2000 | Leo Higgins | [20] | |||
The Five Lamps[21] General Henry Hall Memorial |
Amiens Street/North Strand | c.1880 | |||||
North Strand Bombing Memorial | North Strand Road | 1991 | |||||
Sundial | Mountjoy Square | 1988 | Polar Sundial and Tempus - is inscribed on it. | ||||
Mosaic tile and concrete tree | Mountjoy Square | There are two of these in the centre of the square and both were created by the nearby Pavee Point centre | |||||
Drop | Maritime Sculpture Garden, Dublin Port | 2017 | Eimear Murphy | ||||
The Mariner | Maritime Sculpture Garden, Dublin Port | 1975 | John Behan | Made of scrap metal | |||
Hexagon (This could be it) | North Strand Bombing Memorial Garden (formerly in the National Botanic Gardens) | 2014 | Steven Doody | Made from weathered steel (COR-TEN) | |||
2 x stone plaques commemorating the opening of Spencer Dock | Royal Canal lifting bridge | 15 April 1873 | Unknown | Made from carved limestone | |||
Metal Plaque and cross on ground commemorating Matt Talbot | Matt Talbot Court, Seán O'Casey Avenue 53.356750°N 6.255111°W |
August 1971 | Unknown | Inscription reads "These flats have been named Matt Talbot Court to commemorate the servant of God Matt Talbot who for the last 25 years of his life lived in a single room in 18 Upper Rutland Street. This house with many others was demolished to make room for these flats. Its site is marked to the left of this plaque." |
City North West
This area of the city is bounded to the east by O'Connell Street, Parnell Square East, North Frederick Street, and Lower Dorset Street. To the north and west it is bounded by the North Circular Road and to the south by the Liffey Quays.
Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Artist / designer | Type | Designation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ag Crú na Gréine | Wolfe Tone Square, Jervis Street | 2003 | Jackie McKenna | "Enjoying the sun"[22] | |||
Easter Rising Memorial | Arbour Hill Cemetery | ||||||
The Healing Hands | Mater Plot/Berkeley Road | 2000 | Tony O'Malley | ||||
Four Masters Memorial | Mater Plot/Berkeley Road | 1876 | James Cahill | ||||
Children of Lir | Garden of Remembrance, Parnell Square |
1966 | Oisín Kelly | ||||
Irish Volunteers memorial | Parnell Square East | 1960 | Werner Schurmann | ||||
Suzanne Walking in Leather Skirt | Parnell Square north | 2006 | Julian Opie | Two-sided animated LED display outside the Hugh Lane Gallery | |||
Let's Dance Memorial to the Miami Showband killings |
Parnell Square north | 2007 | Redmond Herrity | ||||
Brendan Behan | Royal Canal, Dorset Street | 2003 | John Coll | ||||
Peadar Kearney | Lower Dorset Street | ||||||
The Soldier War of Independence Memorial |
Blessington Street Park | 1939 | Leo Broe | ||||
Natural Histories | Blessington Street Basin 53.35754°N 6.270686°W |
1994 | Austin McQuinn | ||||
Éire 1798 Memorial | St. Michan's Park | 1903 | Unknown | ||||
Our Lady, Queen of Peace | Broadstone | unknown - Marian year 1954? | |||||
The O'Rahilly | O'Rahilly Parade | 2005 | Shane Cullen | ||||
Demolition Dave | Smithfield Luas stop | 2004 | James Gannon | Commissioned by the Railway Procurement Agency to celebrate the life of demolition manager Dave Conway | |||
Jerome Connor | Infirmary Road, Dublin 7 | Unknown | Bronze plaque overlooking phoenix park | ||||
Spiderweb Sculpture | Corner of Western Way and Mountjoy Street | 2003 | Kathleen O'Brien | An iron representation of a spiders webs affixed across the side of 53 Mountjoy Street. Commissioned by Dr Austin O’Carroll, whose GP practice used to be located inside the building.[23] | |||
The Hungry Tree | King's Inns Park | 20th Century | King's Inns Park staff | A London plane which has been allowed to partially consume an adjacent park bench over the decades. | |||
Dublin's Last Supper | The Italian Quarter (Bloom Lane) | 2004 | John Byrne | Depicting a modern-day re-enactment of Leonardo da Vinci's 'The Last Supper', Byrne added an 'Irish twist' by replacing the Biblical characters with a cast of local Dubliners that reflected a "changing society and the growing cultural mix in Dublin".[24] |
South city centre
Trinity College
Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Artist / designer | Type | Designation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Edmund Burke | Trinity College 53.344574°N 6.259191°W |
1868 | John Henry Foley | ||||
Oliver Goldsmith | Trinity College 53.344381°N 6.259210°W |
1864 | John Henry Foley | ||||
William Lecky | Trinity College | 1904 | Goscombe John | ||||
George Salmon | Trinity College | 1911 | John Hughes | ||||
Campanile | Trinity College | 1853 | Charles Lanyon, Thomas Kirk |
||||
Sphere Within Sphere | Trinity College 53.343812°N 6.255903°W |
1982 | Arnaldo Pomodoro | ||||
Reclining Connected Forms | Trinity College | 1969 | Henry Moore | ||||
Cactus Provisoire | Trinity College | 1976 | Alexander Calder | ||||
The Double Helix | Trinity College | 2003 | Brian King | ||||
Chac Mool | Trinity College | 2015 | Sebastián | [25] | |||
Apples and Atoms Ernest Walton |
Trinity College 53.343575°N 6.252427°W |
2013 | Eilis O'Connell | [26] | |||
Countermovement | Trinity College | 1985 | Michael Warren | [27] |
St. Stephen's Green
Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Artist / designer | Type | Designation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fusiliers' Arch Royal Dublin Fusiliers |
St Stephen's Green | 1907 | John Howard Pentland | [28] | |||
Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa | St Stephen's Green | ||||||
James Joyce | St Stephen's Green | 1982 | Marjorie Fitzgibbon | [10] | |||
Lord Ardilaun | St Stephen's Green | 1891 | Thomas Farrell | ||||
Fianna Éireann memorial | St Stephen's Green | 1966 | |||||
Robert Emmet | St Stephen's Green | 1916 (original) | Jerome Connor | See Robert Emmet (Connor) | |||
Tom Kettle | St Stephen's Green | 1919 (bust) 1927 (memorial) | Albert G. Power | [29] | |||
Constance Markievicz | St Stephen's Green | ||||||
Three Fates | St Stephen's Green | 1956 | Joseph Wackerle | [30] | |||
Lady Laura Grattan Font | St Stephen's Green North | 1880 | [31] | ||||
James Clarence Mangan | St Stephen's Green | 1909 | Oliver Sheppard | ||||
Standing Figure: Knife Edge W. B. Yeats memorial |
St Stephen's Green | 1961 | Henry Moore | ||||
Rabindranath Tagore | St Stephen's Green | 2011 | |||||
Rose Bowl | St Stephen's Green | 2006 | Sandra Bell | [32] | |||
Wolfe Tone | St Stephen's Green | 1967 | Edward Delaney | ||||
Great Famine Monument | St Stephen's Green | 1967 | Edward Delaney | ||||
Anna and Thomas Haslam Memorial | St Stephen's Green | 1923 | |||||
Louie Bennett and Helen Chenevix Memorial | St Stephen's Green | 1958 | |||||
Eqyptian and Nubian noblewomen | Shelbourne Hotel, St Stephen's Green | 1867 | Mathurin Moreau | 4 statues outside the Shelbourne Hotel[33] |
Merrion Square Park
Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Artist / designer | Type | Designation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Oscar Wilde Memorial Sculpture | Merrion Square Park 53.340806°N 6.250545°W |
1997 | Danny Osborne | [22] | |||
Constance Lloyd Companion piece to the Oscar Wilde Memorial |
Merrion Square Park 53.340857°N 6.250486°W |
1997 | Danny Osborne | ||||
Dionysus Companion piece to the Oscar Wilde Memorial |
Merrion Square Park 53.340853°N 6.250590°W |
1997 | Danny Osborne | ||||
Michael Collins | Merrion Square Park | 1990 | Dick Joynt | [22] | |||
Joker's Chair Dermot Morgan |
Merrion Square Park 53.339917°N 6.248921°W |
2002 | Catherine Greene | [22] | |||
Éire sculpture | Merrion Square Park | 1974 | Jerome Connor | ||||
Bernardo O'Higgins | Merrion Square Park | 1995 | Francisco Orellano Pavez | ||||
Henry Grattan | Merrion Square Park | 1982 | Peter Grant | ||||
The Victims | Merrion Square Park | 1976 | Andrew O'Connor | ||||
National Memorial to Members of the Defence Forces Who Have Died in Service |
Merrion Square Park | 2008 | Brian King | ||||
Mother and Child | Merrion Square Park | 1985 | Patrick Roe | ||||
Tribute Head II | Merrion Square Park | 1983 | Elisabeth Frink | ||||
George William Russell (Æ) | Merrion Square Park | 1985 | Jerome Connor | ||||
Rutland Fountain | Merrion Square Park | 1792 | Francis Sandys |
Iveagh Gardens
Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Artist / designer | Type | Designation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
John McCormack | Iveagh Gardens | 2008 | Elizabeth O'Kane | [34] | |||
Neptune x 2 | Iveagh Gardens | 1865 | Unknown | Two statues of Neptune Roman god of fresh water which are broken. The remains lie covered by undergrowth | |||
Unknown | Iveagh Gardens | 1865 | Unknown | Headless classical statue - likely Roman goddess on a granite plinth. Other similar statues are dotted around the park and are also in poor condition | |||
Unknown | Iveagh Gardens | 1865 | Unknown | Classical statue of female figure with half of left arm missing - likely Roman goddess | |||
Fountain x 2 | Iveagh Gardens | 1865 | Ninian Niven | ||||
Sundial | Iveagh Gardens | Unknown | Sundial at the centre of an ornamental hedgerow maze |
South Quays
Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Artist / designer | Type | Designation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Matt Talbot | City Quay | 1988 | James Power | [13] | |||
Irish Merchant Navy Memorial | Elizabeth O'Farrell Park on City Quay | 1990 | |||||
Admiral William Brown | Sir John Rogerson's Quay 53.346040°N 6.239526°W |
2006 | [13] | ||||
Gaswork | Sir John Rogerson's Quay 53.34591°N 6.235546°W |
2012 | John Kindness | Commissioned by Bord Gáis to commemorate the history of gas in Dublin[35] | |||
The Linesman | City Quay 53.347082°N 6.249143°W |
1999 | Dony MacManus | [13] | |||
Patrick Sheahan Memorial | Hawkins Street | 1906 | W.P. O'Neill | ||||
People's Island | Traffic island at junction of D'Olier Street and Westmoreland Street | 1988 | Rachel Joynt | ||||
Sunlight Chambers | Essex Quay 53.345289°N 6.267759°W |
1902 | Edward Ould | ||||
Wood Quay | Wood Quay | 2002 | Michael Warren | ||||
Viking Boat | Essex Quay | 1988 | Betty Newman | [36] |
City South East
This area of the city is bounded to the west by Westmoreland Street, Trinity College, Grafton Street, St. Stephens Green West, and Harcourt Street. To the north it is bounded by the Liffey Quays, and to the south by the Grand Canal. To the east it includes Irishtown and Ringsend. Locations within this area with their own article subsections such as St. Stephen's Green are excluded.
Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Artist / designer | Type | Designation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Thomas Moore | College Street | 1857 | Christopher Moore | ||||
Long Stone replica | College Street | 1986 | Cliodhna Cussen | [37] The Steine of Long Stone (Ivar the Boneless' Pillar). The original Long Stone it replaced was located near this spot from around the 10th or 11th century and stood 12 to 14 feet high. It was removed in the early 18th century and its whereabouts are now unknown. | |||
Constance Markievicz | Townsend Street | 1998 | Elizabeth McLaughlin | Also show her cocker spaniel dog called Poppet. | |||
Harmony | Pearse Square, Pearse Street | 1998 | Sandra Bell | [13] | |||
Units of Potential | Pearse Street | 2011 | Alice Rekab | ||||
Táin Mosaic | Nassau Street | 1974 | Desmond Kinney | ||||
William Plunket | Kildare Street | 1901 | Hamo Thornycroft | [38] | |||
Leinster Lawn Cenotaph |
Leinster Lawn, Leinster House |
1923 | Raymond McGrath | A temporary structure was erected in 1923 on Leinster Lawn, this was replaced by this more modern version in 1950.[39] Four wreathed bronze plaques are inset in its base, three bear a low-relief profile of Griffith, Collins and O'Higgins. The fourth contains an inscription in Irish: "Do chum glóire Dé agus onóra na hÉireann".[lower-alpha 1] | |||
Constance Markievicz | Leinster House | 1930s | Leo Broe | [40] | |||
Industry and Fame | Leinster House | 1908 | John Hughes | Originally part of the Queen Victoria statue which stood outside Leinster House on Kildare Street side. See Past Public Art section below.[40] Returned to Leinster House in 2001. | |||
Prince Albert | Leinster Lawn, Leinster House |
1868 | John Henry Foley | Companion piece to statue of Queen Victoria which stood outside Leinster House on Kildare Street side. See Past Public Art section below. | |||
Thomas Heazle Parke | Natural History Museum, Merrion Street |
||||||
William Dargan | National Gallery, Merrion Street |
1853 | |||||
The Kiss | Earlsfort Terrace | 1989 | Rowan Gillespie | ||||
Lean | Earlsfort Terrace | 2017 | Caoimhe Kilfeather | Commissioned by the law firm Arthur Cox | |||
An SpéirBhean | Windsor Place, Pembroke Street | 1990 | Robin Buick | Also called Sky Woman or Heavenly Woman | |||
Reflections | Miesian Plaza, Baggot Street Lower | 1978 | Michael Bulfin | [41] | |||
Red Cardinal | Miesian Plaza, Baggot Street Lower | 1978 | John Burke | [41] | |||
Catherine McAuley | Baggot Street Lower | 1994 | Michael Burke | [42] | |||
Somewhere between Andromeda and Vulpecula: Sky Atlas |
Percy Place, off Haddington Road 53.334452°N 6.244131°W |
2014 | Isabel Nolan | ||||
Birdy | Upper Mount Street | 1997 | Rowan Gillespie | ||||
Memories of Mount Street | Upper Mount Street | 1988 | Derek A. Fitzsimons | ||||
Brian Friel and John B. Keane | Upper Mount Street 53.336593°N 6.243247°W |
1994 | Neil C. Breen | Previously the statues were inside the window of a nearby building. Moved outside c. 2017 | |||
Easter Rising | Mount Street Bridge | [43] | |||||
Carnac | Upper Leeson Street | 1979 | Bob Mulcahy | Granite abstract sculpture located on the traffic island.[44] | |||
Patrick Kavanagh | Grand Canal | 1991 | John Coll | ||||
Overflow | Grand Canal Street | 1997 | Linda Brunker | [45] | |||
Grand Canal Square | Grand Canal Dock | 2008 | Martha Schwartz | ||||
Dodder Buoy | Grand Canal Dock | ||||||
More Equal | Grand Canal Plaza | 1999 | Eilis O'Connell | [46] | |||
Queen Maedbh | Burlington Road | 2004 | Patrick O'Reilly | ||||
Barge Horse | Herbert Place | 1999 | Maurice Harron | ||||
An Gallán Gréine[47] | Sean Moore Park, Irishtown | 1983 | Clíodna Cussen | "Sun Stone" | |||
Irish Mercantile Marine World War II memorial | Irishtown 53.337867°N 6.219618°W |
1984 | [48] | ||||
William Ashford | Irishtown 53.339345°N 6.223015°W |
1893 | [49] | ||||
James Joyce | Grounds of the Merrion Hotel | Rowan Gillespie | 2m high bronze statue titled Ripples of Ulysses |
City South West
This area of the city is bounded to the east by Westmoreland Street, Trinity College, Grafton Street, St. Stephens Green West, and Harcourt Street. To the north it is bounded by the Liffey Quays, and to the south by the Grand Canal. To the west it is bounded by the South Circular Road.
Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Artist / designer | Type | Designation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Henry Grattan | College Green | 1876 | John Henry Foley | ||||
Thomas Davis | College Green | 1966 | Edward Delaney | ||||
Four Angels Fountain Secondary piece to Davis Memorial |
College Green | 1966 | Edward Delaney | ||||
Crann an Óir | Central Plaza, Dame Street 53.344431°N 6.262783°W |
1991 | Éamonn O'Doherty | [50] | |||
Bronze Palm Tree seat | Temple Bar 53.345608°N 6.262580°W |
Vincent Browne | |||||
Love Lane | Crampton Court 53.344666°N 6.266604°W |
2014 | Anna Doran[51] | A selection of ceramic tiles with quotes about love and heartbreak, lyrics, poetry and Irish wit submitted by the public to the artist via social media.[51] | |||
Oliver St. John Gogarty and James Joyce | Temple Bar | ||||||
Sir William Temple Plaque | Temple Bar/Temple Lane | ||||||
Molly Malone | Suffolk Street, 53.343753°N 6.260939°W |
1988 | Jeanne Rynhart | Previously Grafton Street from 1988 to 2014 | |||
Luke Kelly | South King Street | 2019 | John Coll | [15] | |||
Dublin Yeomanry Memorial | St. Andrew Street | ||||||
St Andrew | St. Andrew Street | 1803 | |||||
Phil Lynott | Harry Street | 2005 | Paul Daly | "The Ace with the Bass"[52] | |||
Why go Bald | Dame Lane, off South Great Georges Street 53.343972°N 6.264270°W |
1962 | An advertising sign for the Universal Hair and Scalp Clinic. It was restored in 1999.[53][54] | ||||
Veronica Guerin | Dubhlinn Gardens, Dublin Castle | 2001 | John Coll | ||||
Garda Memorial Garden | Dubhlinn Gardens, Dublin Castle | 2010 | Anna Dolan | ||||
Serpent Water Feature | Dubhlinn Gardens, Dublin Castle | 1994 | Killian Shurmann | ||||
Special Olympics | Dubhlinn Gardens, Dublin Castle | 2003 | John Behan | ||||
Benjamin Guinness | St Patrick's Cathedral | 1875 | John Henry Foley | ||||
Millennium Child | Christchurch Place 53.342802°N 6.271502°W |
2000 | John Behan | [55] | |||
Tree of Life | Peace Park, Christ Church Cathedral | 1988 | Leo Higgins, Colm Brennan |
||||
John Field | Golden Lane 53.34053°N 6.269918°W |
||||||
Liberty Bell | St. Patrick's Park | 1988 | Vivienne Roche | ||||
The Literary Parade |
St. Patrick's Park | 1988 | Colm Brennan, John Coll |
||||
Sentinel | Patrick Street | 1994 | Vivienne Roche | ||||
The Obelisk Fountain | Thomas Street | 1790 | Francis Sandys | ||||
Adult and Child Seat | St. Catherine's Park, Thomas Street | 1988 | Jim Flavin[56] | Commissioned as part of the AIB sponsored Dublin Millennium Sculpture Symposium 1988 | |||
Homeless Jesus | Christ Church Cathedral | Timothy Schmalz | |||||
Rialto | Rialto 53.336249°N 6.298801°W |
2000 | Sandra Bell |
Northside suburbs
Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Artist / designer | Type | Designation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lock Keeper | 10th lock, Royal Canal, Ashtown | 2007 | |||||
Martin Savage | Ashtown | 1948 | |||||
Eyes for You | Balgriffin | 2018 | Eileen MacDonagh | Wicklow granite sculpture commissioned by Cairn Homes and Dublin City Council. it is circa 3m high and weighs 5 tonnes.[57] | |||
Michael Cusack | Croke Park, Jones Road | 2011 | Paul Ferriter | ||||
Let the Life Flow Through | Ballygall | 1996 | Elizabeth McLaughlin | [58] | |||
amaptocare | Ballymun | 2003–2006 (and ongoing) | Jochen Gerz | Participative arts project in which members of the public sponsored trees (around 635 in all) to be planted across all neighbourhoods of Ballymun during the regeneration of the area; a plaza and map monumental aspect has yet to be completed. | |||
Another Sphere | Ballymun | 2009 | Kevin Atherton | Consists of a pair of stainless steel hemispheres sited in two different parts of Balcurris Park in Ballymun. | |||
Cathode/Anode | Main Street, Ballymun | 2005 | Andrew Clancy | [59] | |||
Misneach | Trinity Comprehensive School, Ballymun | 2010 | John Byrne | [60] | |||
Pisces | Chapelizod 53.350793°N 6.353066°W |
Located on Kylemore Road near the corner with Lucan Road | |||||
Moai sculpture | Clontarf Road | 2004 | Alejandro Pakarati | Moai is the correct name for an Easter Island statue. Donated by the Government of Chile to the City of Dublin[61] | |||
Realt na Mára Mary, Queen of the Sea |
Bull Wall, Clontarf | 1972 | Cecil King | ||||
Windsculpture | Clontarf Road / Alfie Byrne Road | 1988 | Éamonn O'Doherty | ||||
Dancing Couple Stardust fire |
Stardust Memorial Park, Coolock | 1993 | Robin Buick | [62] | |||
Family Unit 1 | Fairview Park | 1988 | Joe Moran | ||||
Seán Russell | Fairview Park | 2009 | Willie Malone | Original stone statue 1951 | |||
Flags of the Easter Rising | Finglas | 2016 | |||||
Liam Mellows | Finglas | 2019 | |||||
The Nethercross | St. Canice's graveyard, Finglas | 9th century | In current location since 1806[63] | ||||
Niche | Finglas Road 53.379986°N 6.288938°W |
2007 | Orla de Brí | ||||
The Spirit of Finglas | Finglas village centre | 1991 | Leo Higgins | ||||
The Bridge Fiacha Dhubha Fhionglaise ar Foluain |
Kildonan Park, Finglas 53.392995°N 6.312254°W |
2021 | Sara Cunnigham-Bell | Finglas Ravens Soar[64] | |||
Our Lady (Virgin Mary) | Our Lady's Park, Drumcondra | unknown - Marian year 1954? | |||||
Howth Fishermens' Association Memorial | Howth Harbour | 1994 | |||||
Realt na Mára Star of the Sea[65] |
Howth Fishing Pier | 2013 | Robert McColgan | ||||
River Run | Phibsborough Public Library, Phibsborough | 'River Run' was designed by Dublin City Council Parks and Landscape Services to honour Dublin's designation as a UNESCO City of Literature. It is an element of a quote from James Joyce's Finnegans Wake | |||||
Grass Seed | Saint Anne's Park, Raheny | early 1970s | unknown | [22] | |||
The Mad Cow | Saint Anne's Park | 1996 | St. John Hennessy | [22] | |||
Tree of Life | Saint Anne's Park | 2015 | Tommy Craggs | Carved out of a dead Monterey cypress[66] | |||
Phoenix Folly | Santry Demesne 53.402062°N 6.245553°W |
||||||
Temple Folly | Santry Demesne | ||||||
Luí-na-Gréine | Carrickbrack Road, near Sutton Strand | Mid 2000s | Cliodhna Cussen | Granite carved Winter Solstice Sunset marking stone and viewing bench | |||
RMS Tayleur | Portrane |
Phoenix Park
Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Artist / designer | Type | Designation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wellington Monument | Phoenix Park | 1861 | Robert Smirke | ||||
Phoenix Column | Phoenix Park | 1747 | |||||
Papal Cross Pope John Paul II's visit to Ireland |
Phoenix Park | 1979 | Paschal Clarke | ||||
Memorial Cross Phoenix Park Murders |
Phoenix Park | 1883 | [67] | ||||
Seán Heuston | Phoenix Park | 1943 | Laurence Campbell | ||||
Plinth of former statue of George Howard | Phoenix Park | 1870 | Statue blown up in 1958 |
Farmleigh
Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Artist / designer | Type | Designation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Convergence | Farmleigh | 2004 | Brian King | Commissioned to celebrate the accession of 10 new states to the EU in 2004[68] | |||
Statue in Fountain | Farmleigh | Carved carrara marble fountain with putti figures[69] | |||||
Farmleigh | Tony Cragg | ||||||
Éan Mór | Farmleigh | Breon O'Casey | Part of a series of bird statues in bronze and wood | ||||
Remembering | Farmleigh | John Wiedman | Inspired by a machine that made milk substitute for Air Force personnel stationed in Newfoundland, Canada | ||||
Hybrid Vigour | Farmleigh | James Gannon |
Glasnevin Cemetery
Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Artist / designer | Type | Designation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
O'Connell Tower | Glasnevin Cemetery | ||||||
Young Irelanders and Fenians Memorial | Glasnevin Cemetery | ||||||
Great War Monument | Glasnevin Cemetery | ||||||
Easter Rising Necrology Wall | Glasnevin Cemetery | 2016 | |||||
Cross of Sacrifice | Glasnevin Cemetery | 2014 | |||||
16th Irish Division Memorial | Glasnevin Cemetery | 2016 | |||||
Great Famine Memorial | Glasnevin Cemetery | 2016 | |||||
1916 Easter Rising Memorial | St Paul's, Glasnevin Cemetery | 2016 |
National Botanic Gardens, Glasnevin
Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Artist / designer | Type | Designation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
De Rerum Natura | National Botanic Gardens | Plaque on ground at entrance from carpark | |||||
Between art and nature | National Botanic Gardens | 2001 | O'Connor | Alternative Latin title 'Inter artes et naturam' | |||
Socrates | National Botanic Gardens | [70] | |||||
Sepian Blue | National Botanic Gardens | 2007 | Nasser Azam | [71] | |||
Kingdom of Plants Arising | National Botanic Gardens | Michael Quane | [72] | ||||
Child and Ball Trough | National Botanic Gardens | ||||||
Craobh | National Botanic Gardens | 1995 | Gerard Cox | [73] | |||
Sensory Garden Sculpture | National Botanic Gardens | [74] | |||||
Two Women | National Botanic Gardens | ||||||
Chinese Lion | National Botanic Gardens | ||||||
Double Helix | National Botanic Gardens | 2013 | Charles Jencks | [75] |
Southside suburbs
Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Artist / designer | Type | Designation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Proclamation group Proclamation of the Irish Republic |
Kilmainham Gaol | 2007 | Rowan Gillespie | ||||
Cross of Sacrifice | Irish National War Memorial Gardens, Islandbridge | 1940 | Edwin Lutyens | [76] | |||
Stone of Remembrance | Irish National War Memorial Gardens, Islandbridge | 1940 | Edwin Lutyens | [76] | |||
Sunken Rose Garden and granite Bookrooms | Irish National War Memorial Gardens, Islandbridge | 1940 | Edwin Lutyens | [76] | |||
Domed Temple | Irish National War Memorial Gardens, Islandbridge | 1940 | Edwin Lutyens | [76] | |||
Freedom | Facebook campus, Merrion Road |
Alexandra Wejchert | [77] | ||||
An Cailín Bán | Sandymount Strand | 2002 | Sebastián | ||||
W. B. Yeats | Sandymount Green | 1921 | Albert Power | ||||
Seamus Heaney | Sandymount Green | 2016 | Carolyn Mulholland | [78] | |||
Wave | Park West | 2001 | Angela Conner | ||||
Dublin Brigade IRA memorial | Harold's Cross | 1954 | [79] | ||||
Robert Emmet | Harold's Cross Road | 2003 | Erected by the Robert Emmet Association to commemorate his arrest at Palmer's House in 1803. | ||||
Éamonn Ceannt | Éamonn Ceannt Park, Harold's Cross 53.322214°N 6.294121°W |
1960s | |||||
Arthur Morrison Monument | Donnybrook | 1838 | Monument in the shape of a small obelisk.[80] | ||||
Who Made The World | Ballsbridge 53.328514°N 6.231763°W |
Cliodna Cussen | |||||
Horse (stallion) | Ballsbridge | 1984 | In the grounds of the Bewleys/Clayton Hotel. Formerly the Masonic Female Orphan School of Ireland. | ||||
Bird | Herbert Park, Ballsbridge | 1990 | Eoin Byrne | ||||
Richard Crosbie | Ranelagh Gardens | 2008 | Rory Breslin | ||||
A Rhinoceros | Classon's Bridge, Milltown 53.307935°N 6.254403°W |
2002 | Unknown | [81] |
University College Dublin
Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Artist / designer | Type | Designation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Noah's Egg | Veterinary building, UCD | 2004 | Rachel Joynt | ||||
Judgement | Sutherland School of Law, UCD | 2013 | Rowan Gillespie | Donated to UCD by Peter Sutherland. It is based on a small sculpture made by Rowan Gillespie in 1991 in response to a philosophical argument about the Iraq war. | |||
Iphigenia | Restaurant Building, UCD | 1984 | Tom Glendon |
North County Dublin
Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Artist / designer | Type | Designation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
The Nature Goddess | Millennium Park, Blanchardstown 53.388719°N 6.398475°W |
2018 | Richie Clarke | ||||
Inverted Oil Rig | Father Collins Park, Clongriffin | 2012 | Alan Phelan | As of September 2020, it has been removed from the lake and is in storage in the park. | |||
Hiroshima Memorial Sculpture | Dublin Airport | Vincent Browne | |||||
Mother and Child | Dublin Airport | ||||||
Spirit of the Air | Dublin Airport roundabout | 1991 | Richard Enda King | ||||
Forrest Tavern memorial | Dublin Airport, R108 53.431812°N 6.264591°W |
1990 | Previously located in what is now the North Runway, moved to its current location in 2017. | ||||
Thomas Ashe | Lusk, Dublin | 2017 | Paul D'Arcy | ||||
M1 Poppies | M1 Lissenhall exit to the R126 | 2012 | Douglas Mooney | 5 wind-moved solar-powered illuminated poppies[82] | |||
Beehive huts | Balbriggan bypass, near the Meath border | 2001 | Robert McColgan and Irene Benner[83] | Inspired by St. Molach, a beekeeper. | |||
Open Volumes | Balbriggan | 2007 | Mark Ryan | ||||
The Ammonite | Malahide Marina | 2000 | Niall O'Neill | ||||
Séamus Ennis | Naul, Dublin | ||||||
Eccentric orbit | Portmarnock Beach | 2002 | Rachel Joynt, Remco de Fouw |
[84] | |||
St. Doulagh's Cross | St Doulagh's Church, Malahide Road | Early Medieval | Unknown | ||||
James Hans Hamilton | Skerries, Dublin | 1870 | Hamilton Monument in the shape of an obelisk[85] | ||||
Tidy Towns sculpture | Skerries, Dublin | 2016 | Shane Holland | Commemorates Skerries winning the Tidy Towns competition in 2016 | |||
The Skerries and Loughshinny Sea Pole | Skerries, Dublin | 2013 | Shane Holland | A memorial for those lost to the sea. The climbable pole was a lifesaving part of the 'Apparatus' system used by the coastguard in the rescuing of ships in distress off the Skerries coast. | |||
Percy French | Skerries, Dublin | 2008 | Bríd Ní Rinn | The view from Skerries inspired Percy French to write The Mountains of Mourne. | |||
Cormorant | Skerries, Dublin | 2002 | Bríd Ní Rinn | ||||
Terns | Skerries, Dublin | 2004 | Bríd Ní Rinn |
South County Dublin
Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Artist / designer | Type | Designation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Famine cross | Ballinascorney | c. 1850 | |||||
Blackrock Dolmen | Blackrock | 1987 | Rowan Gillespie | ||||
Blackrock Cross | Blackrock | 8th or 9th Century | unknown | ||||
Killiney Hill Obelisk | Killiney Hill | 1742 | John Mapas | ||||
Patrick Sarsfield | Lucan, County Dublin | c. 1790 | [86] | ||||
The Marker Tree[87] | N7, Kingswood interchange | 2011 | Andreas Kopp | ||||
Anne Devlin[88] | Rathfarnham | 2003 | Clodagh Emoe | Erected by the Anne Devlin Commemoration Association. Life-size bronze statue of Anne Devlin, Robert Emmet's loyal friend and supporter. | |||
Love All | Templeogue 53.298336°N 6.304008°W |
2007 | Rachel Joynt | [89] | |||
Stillorgan Obelisk | Stillorgan | 1727 | Edward Lovett Pearce | ||||
William Orpen | Stillorgan | 2018 | Rowan Gillespie | [90] | |||
The Fiddler of Dooney | Stillorgan Shopping Centre | Imogen Stuart | [91] | ||||
St. Maelruan's Losset | Tallaght | Unknown but possibly ancient | Unknown | ||||
Cliabhan (cradle)[92] | Tallaght - Tymon Park | 2006 | Linda Brunker | Commissioned by Pact to commemorate their 50th anniversary and 50 years of adoption in Ireland. Pact is an independent Irish charity founded in 1952. | |||
Unity | Cherrywood 53.242272°N 6.139242°W |
2021 | Sandra Bell | [93] |
Dún Laoghaire
Image | Title / subject | Location and coordinates |
Date | Artist / designer | Type | Designation | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Queen Victoria Fountain | Dún Laoghaire | ||||||
Capt. J. McNeil Boyd Obelisk | Dún Laoghaire Harbour | Royal St. George Yacht Club | |||||
George IV Obelisk | Dún Laoghaire | 1823 | [94] | ||||
Christ the King | Dún Laoghaire | 1978 | Andrew O'Connor | [94] | |||
Archer II | Dún Laoghaire | Niall O'Neill | |||||
Roger Casement | Dún Laoghaire | 2021 | Mark Richards | ||||
Commemorative Trees Stone | People's Park, Dún Laoghaire | ||||||
Mothership | Glasthule | 1999 | Rachel Joynt | ||||
Thus Daedalus Flew | Killiney Hill | 1986 | Niall O'Neill |
Past public art
Image | Title / subject | Location | Date | Artist / designer | Notes and references |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Equestrian Statue of George I | Initially at Essex Bridge, later at the Mansion House | 1722–1755, 1789–1922 |
John Nost | Initially erected on Essex Bridge (now Grattan Bridge) in 1722, and removed in 1755. It was later re-erected in the garden of the Mansion House in 1789, where it stood until 1922. In 1937, it was sold to the Barber Institute of Fine Arts in Birmingham, England, where it stands as of 2023.[95] | |
George II | St Stephen's Green | 1758–1937 | John van Nost the younger | Blown up on 13 May 1937, the day after the coronation of George VI.[96] | |
Archibald Montgomerie[97] | St Stephen's Green | 1866–1958 | Patrick MacDowell[98] | Destroyed in August 1958 in an explosion by the IRA, two Gardaí and a civilian were injured in the bombing. | |
William of Orange | College Green | 1701–1928 | Grinling Gibbons | Damaged after explosion on anniversary of Armistice Day in 1928, and subsequently removed.[99] Melted down in 1946. | |
Sir Philip Crampton | College Street | 1862–1959 replacing the original Viking Long Stone | John Kirk | Collapsed in 1959 and subsequently removed. Nicknames included "The Pineapple" and "The Cauliflower".[100] It was subsequently replaced by Cliodhna Cussen's The Steine of Long Stone in 1986. | |
Griffith-Collins Cenotaph | Leinster House, Kildare Street | 1923–1939 | George Atkinson | Structure had become dilapidated and was removed in 1939. It was replaced in 1950 by current obelisk on Leinster Lawn (see above)[101] | |
The Market Cross | The junction of High Street and Skinner's Row (now Christchurch Place) near the city tholsel | Early Medieval | Unknown | Its earliest confirmed identification is from a public punishment in 1571. The last remaining drawing of the cross is by John Simmons in 1776. It was then taken down sometime in the late 18th or early 19th century and its whereabouts are unknown.[102] | |
Queen Victoria | Leinster House, Kildare Street | 1904–1948 | John Hughes | Removed in 1948 as part of moves by the Irish State towards declaring a Republic, put on display in Sydney, Australia in 1987.[103][104] The smaller bronze statues are held in storage within the grounds of the National museum overflow facility at St Conleth's Reformatory School. | |
Nelson's Pillar | O'Connell Street | 1809–1966 | Francis Johnston, William Wilkins, Thomas Kirk |
Blown up in 1966 on the 50th anniversary of the 1916 Rising. The head of Nelson's statue was rescued, and is currently on display in the Dublin City Library and Archive on Pearse Street[105] | |
William Blakeney | O'Connell Street | 1759–1782 | John van Nost the younger | Removed sometime before 1782[106] | |
Bowl of Light | O'Connell Bridge | 1953–1963 | Erected to mark inauguration of An Tóstal festival. Flames of sculpture thrown into the Liffey in 1953. Remainder dismantled in 1963.[107][108][109] | ||
Sir Alexander Macdonnell | Marlborough Street | 1878–1958 | Thomas Farrell[110] | Originally located in front of Tyrone House within the grounds of the Department of Education. Now stored in the grounds of the National museum overflow facility at St Conleth's Reformatory School.[111] | |
Gough Monument | Phoenix Park | 1880–1957 | John Henry Foley | Blown up in 1957, it was later restored and re-erected in the grounds of Chillingham Castle, England, in 1990.[60][lower-alpha 2] | |
George Howard | Phoenix Park | 1870–1958 | John Henry Foley | The statue was dislodged by a bomb 28 July 1958 and moved to Castle Howard in Yorkshire. The pedestal remains in place as a memorial.[112] | |
Millennium Clock | River Liffey | March to August 1996 | |||
The Point Rocket | Point Theatre | 2006–? | |||
Three Bears with Attitude | North Wall Quay (3Arena) | 2009–2017 | Patrick O'Reilly | Removed in 2017, current whereabouts unknown.[113] | |
Aspiration – Liberty Scaling the Heights | Grand Canal Street | 1995–2020 | Rowan Gillespie | Removed in 2020[114][115] | |
Gateway | Marine Road, Dún Laoghaire | 2002-2009 | Michael Warren | Removed in 2009. Returned to the artist in 2015 in exchange for an alternative work entitled 'Angel Negro'.[116] |
Notes
- For the glory of God and the honour of Ireland
- Bought by a member of the Guinness family from the Office of Public Works. It was loaned to Humphrey Wakefield of Chillingham Castle. It is on loan until the people of Ireland want it returned.
See also
References
- Dublin: A Cultural History, p. 4, at Google Books
- The Ogham Stone: An Anthology of Contemporary Ireland, p. 155, at Google Books
- "Warm welcome for return of pioneering priest". The Irish Catholic. 27 September 2018.
- "The Famine Memorial and The World Poverty Stone". Dublin Docklands. Archived from the original on 20 September 2014. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
- "Hoax Plaque on Bridge Will Now be Left In Place". The Irish Times. 24 May 2007. Retrieved 27 June 2007.
- "Talking Statues Dublin - Meeting Place". talkingstatuesdublin.ie. Retrieved 6 August 2021.
- "Visit Meeting Place with Discover Ireland". Discover Ireland. Retrieved 5 November 2021.
- The Form of Cities: Political Economy and Urban Design, p. 148, at Google Books
- "Public Art in the Dublin Docklands". www.dublindocklands.ie. 17 December 2019. Retrieved 17 December 2019.
- Fitzgibbon, Marjorie, The Arts Council
- Gerry Boland. A Stroller's Guide to Dublin. Gill & Macmillan, 1999. p. 21. ISBN 0717127885
- "Wishing Hand by Linda Brunker". infomatique.org. Archived from the original on 30 January 2016. Retrieved 27 October 2015.
- "Public Art in Dublin's Docklands". Docklands Authority. Retrieved 16 September 2017.
- "Sculpture and style turn drab street into an exciting plaza". Irish Independent. 10 November 2007.
- "Two new statues of Luke Kelly to be unveiled in Dublin". RTÉ News. 22 January 2019.
- "2006 N C Iris". www.vivienneroche.com. Retrieved 6 January 2021.
- "Steel sculpture heads to Dublin". Gorey Guardian. 23 March 2006. Retrieved 6 January 2021.
- "Cathy Carman". cathycarman.com. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
- "Beds". Grannymar. Retrieved 19 July 2018.
- "A Torch". Grannymar. Retrieved 19 July 2018.
- "The Five Lamps". Dublin City Council. 3 August 2010. Archived from the original on 25 April 2017.
- "Art in Parks: A Guide to Sculpture in Dublin City Parks" (PDF). Dublin City Council. 2014. Retrieved 23 October 2015.
- Lanigan, Michael (29 June 2022). "Brushing Up: A Misunderstood Spiderweb Sculpture". Dublin Inquirer.
- "Dublin's Last Supper". publicart.ie. Retrieved 8 August 2023.
- "A Bridge Between Trinity and Mexico". UniversityTimes.ie. Retrieved 9 August 2017.
- "'Apples and Atoms' by Eilís O'Connell RHA". Trinity College Dublin. Retrieved 9 August 2017.
- "Michael Warren 'Countermovement', 1985, Spanish Chestnut". Trinity College Dublin. Retrieved 15 May 2021.
- "Royal Fusiliers' Memorial Arch". Dictionary of Irish Architects 1720 - 1940. Irish Architecture Archive. Retrieved 5 August 2019.
- Burke, Tom (2004). "In Memory of Lieutenant Tom Kettle, 'B' Company, 9th Royal Dublin Fusiliers". Dublin Historical Record. 57 (2): 164–173. JSTOR 30101500.
- "Fountain of the Three Fates". meetingwater.wordpress.com. April 2012. Retrieved 15 September 2017.
- "MS27 Lady Grattan Fountain - Dublin City Council". www.dublincity.ie. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
- "Rose Bowl, Dublin". 27 October 2010.
- "Shelbourne Hotel statues to be restored to their plinths". The Irish Times. 24 September 2020.
- "Count John McCormack". elizabethokane.com. Retrieved 20 September 2017.
- "By the 'Gaswork' wall". Irish Independent. 14 June 2012.
- "Viking Boat". Dublin City Council. Retrieved 15 September 2017.
- "Cliodhna Cussen". comeheretome.com. Retrieved 15 September 2017.
- "Plunket, William Conyngham". Dictionary of Irish Biography. 2009. Retrieved 29 March 2022.
- "Story of most elusive memorial revealed". Irish Examiner. 27 June 2008.
- "Art in Leinster House". Houses of the Oireachtas. 30 May 2018. Retrieved 4 June 2021.
- "Bank of Ireland, 50-55 Baggot Street, Dublin 2 | Built Dublin". builtdublin.com. Retrieved 4 November 2015.
- "Catherine McAuley". The Institute of Our Lady of Mercy. Retrieved 6 November 2018.
- "Mount Street Bridge". NGA.ie. Retrieved 31 May 2021.
- "An Irishman's Diary about a Dublin sculpture and holidays in France". The Irish Times. 14 November 2015. Retrieved 19 February 2022.
- "Mistaken identity". The Irish Times. 13 September 1997.
- "Eilis O'Connell". eilisoconnell.com. Retrieved 15 September 2017.
- Wallace, Arminta. "The Times We Lived In: You're never to young to get to grips with Joycean quotes". The Irish Times. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
- "Memorial to Irish Merchant Seamen". RTÉ News. 8 April 1984.
- "Dr. William Ashford – Sanymount". Retrieved 29 May 2021.
- "Crann an Óir". publicart.ie. Retrieved 21 March 2015.
- Ryan, Nicky (23 June 2018). "This Temple Bar alleyway has been transformed into something special..." TheJournal.ie. Retrieved 10 November 2022.
- Dublin City Trip 2011, p. 10, at Google Books
- "City's iconic 'Why go Bald?' sign gets heritage grant". Irish Independent. 5 May 2021.
- "'Why Go Bald' Sign". Atlas Obscura. Retrieved 31 May 2021.
- "Millennium child sculpture". alamy.com. Retrieved 20 September 2017.
- "Conserving Our Historic Graveyards | News". The Liberties Dublin. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
- "New Artwork at Parkside". cairnhomes.com. Retrieved 26 May 2020.
- "Sculptor Where art Thou?". Cllr Paul McAuliffe. 15 July 2013.
- "Ballymun benefits from art attack but some unconvinced". Irish Independent. 7 November 2005.
- "Ballymun gets a new local hero". The Irish Times. 10 September 2010.
- "Moai on the Promenade". Retrieved 1 May 2020.
- "Stardust Memorial". Dublin City Council. Retrieved 23 July 2018.
- "Finglas High Cross". MegalithicIreland.com. Retrieved 31 May 2021.
- "The Bridge: Fiacha Dhubha Fhionglaise ar Foluain (Finglas Ravens Soar)". Sculpture Dublin. September 2021. Retrieved 8 April 2023.
- "Réalt na Mara by Robert McColgan, Official Launch, Howth". Fingal County Council. Retrieved 5 August 2020.
- "The dying Dublin tree that's been transformed into a work of art". Retrieved 1 May 2020.
- "An Irishman's Diary: Finding the memorial to the victims of the Invincibles". The Irish Times. 22 August 2015.
- "Farmleigh Sculptures | Farmleigh". Retrieved 24 August 2020.
- "The Parkland | Farmleigh". Retrieved 24 August 2020.
- "Features, National Botanic Gardens, Glasnevin – Socrates". BotanicGardens.ie. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
- "Sculpture In Context 2008". SculptureInContext.com. Retrieved 6 November 2018.
- "Features, National Botanic Gardens, Glasnevin – Quane". BotanicGardens.ie. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
- "Features, National Botanic Gardens, Glasnevin – Craob". BotanicGardens.ie. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
- "Features, National Botanic Gardens, Glasnevin – Aroid". BotanicGardens.ie. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
- "Sculpture of DNA double helix unveiled at the National Botanic Gardens". maxwellphotographyblog.wordpress.com. 29 April 2013. Retrieved 4 November 2015.
- "Dublin Commemorative Sites". Office of Public Works. 22 September 2007. Archived from the original on 20 October 2016. Retrieved 7 December 2016.
- Jean-Louis Cornez. "Alexandra Wejchert - "Freedom"". alexandrawejchert.eu. Retrieved 4 November 2015.
- "Seamus Heaney: Bronze bust unveiled in Dublin". The Irish News. 8 June 2016.
- "I. R. A. Memorial". Irish War Memorials. Retrieved 17 April 2019.
- Parkinson, Danny (1994). "Arthur Morrisson, 1765-1837, Lord Mayor of Dublin 1835". Dublin Historical Record. 47 (2): 183–186. JSTOR 30101089.
- "Double Take: The mysterious African rhino that appeared overnight in a Dublin river". TheJournal.ie. 15 August 2018.
- "Douglas Mooney, M1 Poppies". Fingal County Council. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
- "Story Map Tour". www.arcgis.com. Retrieved 5 August 2020.
- "About Portmarnock Community Association". Portmarnock. Retrieved 23 September 2017.
- "1870 – Hamilton Monument, Skerries, Co. Dublin". archiseek.com. 28 January 2010. Retrieved 27 October 2020.
- "Sarsfield Monument, Lucan House Demesne, Lucan, South Dublin County". National Inventory of Architectural Heritage. Retrieved 29 October 2020.
- "Story Map Tour". arcgis.com. Retrieved 5 August 2020.
- "South Dublin County Public Art - Anne Devlin by Clodagh Emoe". www.southdublin.ie. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
- "Love All for Templeogue Village". South Dublin County Council. 5 July 2007.
- "Orpen sculpture unveiled by Rolling Stone Ronnie Wood". RTÉ News. 16 September 2018.
- "Stillorgan shopping centre". fantasyjackpalance.com. Retrieved 4 November 2015.
- "South Dublin County Public Art - Cliabhan by Linda Brunker". www.southdublin.ie. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
- "Unity". Sanrda Bell. Retrieved 6 November 2021.
- "Dlr sculpture trail map". DLR County Council. Retrieved 27 October 2015.
- "King George I". Statues Hither & Thither. Retrieved 5 November 2018.
- "1758 Statue of George II, St. Stephen's Green, Dublin". Buildings of Ireland, Archiseek. 23 March 2013. Retrieved 6 November 2018.
- "Statue of the Earl of Eglinton, Stephen's Green, Dublin". sources.nli.ie. 1866. Retrieved 21 January 2022.
- "STATUE OF EARL OF EGLINTON". www.dia.ie. Retrieved 21 January 2022.
- "William of Orange". Dublin City Council Libraries. Retrieved 6 November 2018.
- "Crampton Memorial 1959". Dublin City Council Libraries. Retrieved 6 November 2018.
- "Story of most elusive memorial revealed". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 5 November 2018.
- "Dublin city's medieval High Cross | Irish Archaeology". irisharchaeology.ie. Retrieved 2 May 2020.
- "Statue of Queen Victoria, Druitt Street". The Directory of Sydney. Retrieved 6 November 2018.
- "Queen Victoria Statue". Public Art Around the World. Retrieved 6 November 2018.
- "Nelson's Head". Dublin City Council. Retrieved 2 November 2018.
- "John Van Nost". Library Ireland. Retrieved 5 November 2018.
- "O'Connell Bridge and the 'The Bowl Of Light'". 19 March 2012. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
- O'Dwyer, Frederick. Lost Dublin. (HarperCollins 1982).
- "Photo: Flowerbed". img.photobucket.com. Retrieved 4 November 2015.
- Murphy, Paula. "Is it time for Sir Alexander MacDonnell to be restored to his perch in Dublin?". The Irish Times. Retrieved 20 January 2022.
- "Sketch Model Design of the Statue of the late Sir Alexander MacDonnell by Thomas Farrell - Mapping the Practice and Profession of Sculpture in Britain and Ireland 1851-1951". sculpture.gla.ac.uk. Retrieved 10 August 2023.
- "Carlisle Monument, Peoples' Garden, Phoenix Park". Buildings of Ireland. Retrieved 6 November 2018.
- "Receivers remove three bears from Point Depot site". The Irish Times. 10 March 2017.
- "Naked woman removed from Treasury Building in Dublin". The Irish Times. 4 December 2020.
- "Nude male sculpture drove developer up the wall". The Irish Times. 27 November 2012.
- Gartland, Fiona (22 August 2015). "Controversial Dún Laoghaire sculpture returned to artist". The Irish Times. Retrieved 23 April 2023.
External links
Bibliography
- Neal Doherty, 'The Complete Guide to the Statues and Sculptures of Dublin City', Dublin, 2015, ISBN 9781909895720